FOUR -MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedporivKwTribune
"Everybody In Southern Oregon
Scads The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
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ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY Advertising Manager
E. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR, City Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN. Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sporta Editor
OLIVE STARCHES. Society Editor
JACK JACKSON. Sunday Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
March 3. 1897
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NATIONAL EDITORIAL
ASSOCTIrON
J NIWSrArlt
.ruausn.i.
''ASSOCIATION
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 and
(0 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
June 24. 1945
(It was Sunday)
Jackson county voters approve
tax levy for state building fund
and cigarette tax for public
school funds.
v wsssasasasasw
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The world
. security parley at Frisco, in ses
sion longer than the Oregon
legislature, is expected to con
clude the coming week. The
demobilization of the horde of
committees will not take long.
20 YEARS AGO
June 24. 1935
(It was Monday) '
Medford National Guard units
receive satisfactory rating in
inspections at Camp Murray,
Wash.
Jackson county to have large
turkey crop .this year according
to County Agent Robert G. Fow
ler. - ..
SO YEARS AGO
June 24. 1925
(It was Wednesday)
Activities of Oregon National
Guard modified because of in
tense heat; mercury climbs to
104 degrees at l:30p.m.
; Cooperative irrigation experi
ments being conducted between
U.S. Office of Irrigation investi
gation and soil department of
O.A.C. experiment station in
Rogue valley.
40 YEARS AGO
June 24, 1915
(It was Thursday)
State Highway engineers sur
vey proposed Pacific Highway
i route from Central Pcint to
Tolo.
Between 300 and 350 cars of
apples and 250 to 400 cars of
pears .expected to be shipped
xrom Rogue River valley.
What's the Answer?
(Can You Get 4 of the 7?)
Coer. 1955. Editorial Research It opart
1. June 21 has more daylight
than any other day; a little over
(a) 12, (b) 13, (c) 14, (d) 15 or (e)
16 hrs.?
2. Chairman of the Un-Ameri
can Activities committee in Con
gress is Sen. Jenner'(Ind.), Rep.
Walter (Pa.),' Sen. McCarthy
(Wise), Rep. Velde (HI.) or Sen,
Mundt (S.D.)?
. 3. A typical air conditioning
unit in a 1955 car weighs about
as much as a child, an adult,
an adult and a child, or two
adults?
4. More than half the states in
U.N. have given diplomatic rec
ognition to Red China; right or
wrong?
5. A small business may now
get a loan from the federal Small
Business Administration up' to
9 lau.uuu or for more?
6. Texas and Alaska are about
the same size, or Texas is much
larger, or Alaska is much larger?
7. A strabismic person is cross
eyed, pigeon-toed, bigoted, with
out a sense of humor, illegiti
mate, or deaf?
The Answers: 1. A little over
15 hrs. 2. Rep. Walter. 3. About
as much as one adult. 4. Wrong.
5. S150.000 is present limit. 6.
Alaska is much larger. 7. Cross
eyed. DEATH DRIVERS
Chicago About 24 percent of
all drivers involved in fatal auto
accidents during 1954 were
under the age of 25 years .
MAIL TRIBUNE
Solar
Recent items in the news indicate that scientists
are not .relaxing in their constant pursuit of knowl
edge, ranging through the whole field of the physical
sciences.
But the one which particularly caught our eye
was the story about experiments now under way with
the tiny, newly-developed "solar batteries" which
take energy directly from the sun and convert it into
electricity.
THE little gadgets carry with them a significance far
out of proportion to their present effectiveness,
for they are only the first step in a development of
energy use which must come, sooner or later, if our
mechanized civilization is to survive. .
Our oil and coal reserves, which are the mainstay
energy sources of today, are being depleted at a tre
mendous rate. This is not to say that we're going to
run out next year, or 10 years from now. But within
the foreseeable future, even the immense reserves we
now have will be dwindling rapidly to nothingness.
Even nuclear "energy is not inexhaustible, for, at
least in its present stage of development, it is depend
ent upon fissionable materials. And while exploration
is turning up more and more of these all the time, the
supply is not limitless.
WATER power, too, with which our northwest
country has been plentifully blessed, can be de
veloped only up to a point and no further.
Experiments with vegetable wastes can undoubt
edly bring forth extra supplies of energy-creating
fuel. But here too there is a limit.
The solar battery, on the other hand, is the first
attempt to tap directly the source of all these other
types of energy, the sun.
THE sun is the fount of almost limitless power. The
energy which -it pours down each day upon the
earth, as heat and light and other rays, has been meas
ured and is unimaginably great.
If it can be made useful to man, his worries about
energy sources will be gone for many, many years to
come. It could drive , his vehicles over land, across
water and through the air; it could heat his homes,
power his industries, cook his meals. And, if devel
oped soon enough, it could permit our reserves of
petroleum to be used for lubrication and fabrication,
not burned for power.
ALL this takes for granted a vast change in our
"business and industrial community. But this com
munity is changing so rapidly now, and has been
doing so for more than half a century, that the switch
over to new sources of energy will cause little more
flurry, if s much, as did the advent of the automo
bile or the airplane.
So don't laugh off the solar batteries as mere
gadgetry. They may be the forerunners of a new in
dustry, a new energy, and a whole new way of life
which may come within a lifetime. E;A.
: Plywood's Growth
Speaking of changes in industry, the develop
ment of the plywood business, which originated in
Portland just 50 years ago, is a good example of how
research', development and imagination can create
new products and new methods. ;
In the half-century since the first veneers were
glued together for the 1905 Lewis and Clark exposi
tion in Portland, plywood has come to be a major seg
ment of the lumber business. It is now used in ; all
types of construction, in furniture, in interior and ex
terior finishing, and for multiple industrial uses.
THE plywood industry this week staged a Golden
Jubilee event in Portland, with much whoop-te-do
and press agentry. But there was some solid and
serious talk about plywood and its future. A bright
future it appears to be.
In Jackson county we
these proceedings, for we
watch the first major plywood production hereabouts
begin, with two big plants under construction in the
White City area, and others planned. '
Dresent processes in plywood can do fantastic and
wonderful things. Rare veneers can be bonded
with cheaper woods, to put exotic panelling within the
reach of practically every homeowner. New glues and
plastics can make it structurally strong and virtually
weatherproof.
And the end is not yet, for research and experi
mentation are continuing, and we will continue to see
new ideas, new processes and new methods put to
work to make plywood an even more versatile
product. E.A.
Jaycees Schedule
Work parties to prepare the .
Salvation Army's Summer Camp
for children, which will open
Aug. 2, are being organired by
the Medford Junior Chamber of
Commerce, according to Bill
Kramer, chairman of the camp
committee.
Maintenance of the Camp is
one of the major civic projects
of the Jaycees, Kramer said. The
camp provides outdoor activity
for three weeks for children of
this area who might otherwise
be unable to attend a summer
camp.
Providing this ' opportunity
will better the community by
lessening juvenile problems and
creating better future citizens,
Kramer said.
The first Jaycee work party,
composed' of Jaycees and their
wives, will go to the Lake O'
Friday. June 24. 1955
Energy
might take special note of
are now getting ready to
Camp Preparation
Woods June 25 to repair build-
ings and clean the campsite.
Work will continue each week
end until the camp opens. Other
members- of . the Jaycee camp
committee are Larry Allen and
Charles Jones.
Adenauer To Answer
Soviet Invitation
Bonn, Germany (U.PJ Chan
cellor Konrad Adenauer's reply
to the Soviet invitation to visit
Moscow will be dispatched in
the "near future," a Bonn For
eign Office spokesman said to
day. The spokesman said an answer
has been drafted by the Foreign
Office but awaits approval by
Adenauer and the cabinet
Today and
By Walter
THE SNEAK ATTACK
Those who make it their busi
ness to read Soviet newspapers
and magazines, among them no
tably Mr. Harry Schmartz, have
been struck by some recent
articles written by important
military men, all of them em
phasizing that with nuclear wea
pons the decisive consideration
is surprise. This is something
new in the Soviet Union. In
Washngton it has, of course, long
been the accepted assumption,
and the two leading strategical
doctrines are "founded upon it.
The minority school, who be
lieves 'in preventive war, say:
Let us strike first or we shall be
struck down. Those who believe,
in the "deterrent" defense,
which is in fact the official doc
trine, hold that a sneak attack
will not be delivered provided
the retaliatory striking power of
the Strategic Air Force can be
protected against the sneak at
tack: That the Russians will not
destroy, as in Operation Alert,
sixty-orie American cities if the
next day the United States Stra
tegic Air Force will destroy
sixty-one Russian cities. But the
two schools agree that a sneak
attack could be decisive, and
that it must either be fore
stalled or deterred.
The question of the sneak at
tack, thanks to Pearl Harbor, is
very much in our minds, and in
our uninhibited way we discuss
publicly and freely its possibil
ity, its probability, and what can
be done about it. But the Rus
sians have ' not until recently
talked publicly about surprise
attacks. Yet it might fairly be
called the crux of the crux of
the modern problem of arma
ments and security.
MR. SCHMARTZ points out
that these military articles
in the Soviet press have come
after the public demonstration
in the air over Moscow that the
Soviet Union now has inter-continental
bombers. He believes,
the articles are meant to "re
adjust the thinking of Soviet
military men" and "to warn the
West." That may be. But the So
viet Union, being a totalitarian
state," it does seem odd that So
viet military experts should be
indoctrinating Soviet military
men PUBLICLY in articles that
are mailed to Washington. It is
even more odd that the subject
of this public - indoctrination
should be the importance of sur
prising your opponent by not let
ting him have warning that you
will -attack him. :
This is so paradoxical that
cannot help wondering whether
these articles are not addressed
to the . civilian governing class
and to' the party hierarchy, as
well as to the Col. Blimps of the
Red Army. The general purport
of the articles is to tell the Rus
sians that their ancient security
which was based on the vast
bases of their country and the
enormous masses of their sol-
diers has been destroyed by the
revolution in the military -art,
It is at least plausible that the
progressive military men and the
civilians who have understood
the new warfare feel it neces
sary to re-educate the Soviet
ruling class and what public
there is that has to be taken into
account publicly. They may well
be trammg their audience to sup
port the negotiation of . com
promises.
TF THIS is the right explana-
tion, it would be one more rea
son among many others for
thinking that the central and de
termining reason for the re
opening of negotiations between
East and West is the over-all
stalemate in nuclear armaments.
The new weapons are something
radically new something al
together without precedent in
the military situation of the
world, and they have 'now be
gun to revolutionize also the
political relations of states.
From the point of view of high
policy we are now in the third
phase of this epochal military
revolution. In the first phase the
U.S. A. had a monopoly of the
weapons. In the second phase
the U.S.SJI. broke the monop
oly. In this third phase, which is
not technical but psychological,
the governing classes of the
world have gradually realized
that the military revolution has
revolutionized also the relations
of the powers with one another.
Thus, there are now only two
great military powers, and un
less the one could disarm the
other in the first assault which
is a technical improbability
war between them would be
devastation and massacre with
out prospect of victory. All the
other powers including big
powers like Great Britain and
Germany and Red China are
by the very fact of their own
helplessness in nuclear warfare
compelled to make the avoid
ance of war the ultimate rule of
their policy. As a result, the two
great military powers : must J
under penalty of alienating their
allies and the uncommitted-na
tions, show and keep on showing
that they are seeking an
accommodation.
IlfHETHER or not it was the
" President's deliberate in
tention in authorizing Operation
Alert at this time, the over-all
psychological effect is to destroy
all serious opposition to the
coming negotiations. The exer
Tomorrow
Lippmann
cise demonstrated not only that
there is now no passive defense
in the form or shelter and evac
uation, but that for all practical
purposes there can never be
such a defense. It is conceivable
that the inhabitants of sixty-one
cities could go camping in the
country for a few days in June.
But the human mind boggles at
what they would do for shelter
in January, and at any time for
water, food , fuel, and sewage
disposal during the weeks and
weeks on end while the cities
were being decontaminated.
The lesson of Operation Alert
is that when an attack on this
scale becomes feasible, which it
isn't now, the only course is to
see to it that it never takes
place. To this end the exercise
which should be repeated again
and again is the protection
against sneak attacks of the
bases and facilities of the Stra
tegic Air Force. Insofar as they
are secure, there exists the most
effective defense that it is pos
sible to provide.
rpHE new public emphasis on
the surprise attack in the So
viet press opens up interesting
possibilities for the coming talks
about the regulation of arma
ments. For if along with the rest
of - us the Russians are now
worrying about surprise, : we
might all put our minds on de
vising arrangements which
would in effect make surprise
on a massive scale a technical
impossibility.
Maybe it is less important
than we have supposed to in
spect the stockpile, the force
levels, and the manufacturing
facilities, and more important to
be able to detect any important
redeployment and mobilization
of the big bombers. It may be
that what we should try for is
an international early warning
system at the bases from which
a surprise attack would have to
be launched.
I do not pretend to know
whether that is technically pos
sible, or whether it would be
politically acceptable both in the
U.S.S.R. and in the U.S.A. But
there is no doubt that if the
sneak attack could be ruled out
effectively, the greatest of all
the forces of tension would be
eliminated.
Copyright. 1955,
New York Herald Tribune Inc.)
Commy niicatiiioir.s
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of. the writer, although
under certain circumstances the use of a pen, name or initial for publication
is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with
view to clarification and condensation, tetters submitted for publication must
not exceed 400 words. " . .. . -
Medford Called Unchristian
To the Editor: I feel con
strained to submit a little known
fact. Medford, in its avarice to
annex, does not tell of the de
vious methods used to influence
people to vote for annexation,
such as refusing to permit the
Griffin Creek area to be an
nexed to the Kings Highway
Water District, thereby forcing
them, if they want Medford wat
er,' to become a part of the city
of Medford. '
Morally the water that Med
ford controls, belongs to aU the
Deonle of the valley. Medford
cannot possibly use aU the wat
er itself. Why be selfish ana use
it as a big stick? Is this the
Christian way? However there
is an abundance of clean, pure
water under this area and a well
and pumping system could be in
stalled and the people couia re
tain their indenendence. It
could be a monument to Med-
ford's refusal of water.
As for sanitary sewers, Mr.
A. D. Harvey, Medford engineer,
recommends a Metropolitan aan
itary District. Sen Philip Lowry
and Ren. Al Littrell have been
instrumental in the passage oi a
bill authorizing such a district
and their opinions should be re-
srjected. Why not wait unui
Aumist 3. when the bill becomes
law? It is a good sound plan and
why should their efforts go ior
nothing? By waiting, those who
wish for sanitary sewers can
move to organize a district. It
seems we are being given the
rush act.
Jerold W. Swanson
798 Garfield St
Suspicions are Aroused
To the Editor: Meaiorcrs
coming attempt to annex certain
areas to her south giver rise to
speculation.
One wonders: u a certain
leading and wealthy fruit pack
ing firm could wield any in
fluence with city planners and
thus remain with the bulk of its
real estate improvements just
outside the new city limits.
One also wonders: if one were
in the grocery business in a big
way and competition threatened
just outside the present city
limits, could one, in one way
or another, cause the city limits
to encompass the competitor's
land and possibly by so doing
discourage his investment.
Many months ago the first at
tempt was made to organize
what . is now the South Bear
Creek Sanitary District. The law
required that the proposed
boundaries ' be publicized and,
at a court hearing, aU property
owners who wished to be de
clared out could so state. (Inci
dentally, one large property
In The Day's
By FRANK JENKINS
Surgery which RESTORES
THE POWER OF GROWTH to
legs paralyzed by polio was de
scribed today by Dr. Joseph M.
Janes of the Mayo clinic at Ro
chester, Minnesota.
He said the surgery involves
the connecting of certain arter
ies and veins in the paralyzed
limbs. He added: "On the basis
of our work so far it would ap
pear that surgery should be
undertaken before the patient
has reached 12 years of age, as
after that age bone growth is.
likely to be too mature."
THE WORLD moves and in
general it is moving from
good to BETTER, despite the
cynics who contend that it
moves from bad to worse.
IN THE city of Portland, the
legality of pinball machines
is back in the courts again. It
got there by way of a. conten
tion that a Portland ordinance
outlawing the machines doesn't
apply to those which are, not
coin-operated.
When the ordinance became
effective a number of pinball
operators plugged the coin slots
and took their case to ' court.
They got a temporary restrain
ing order that prohibits police
from seizing machines' that are
not operated by coins.
The point will be argued at a
hearing that opens this after
noon.
I'D SAY the big question in
volved is this:
Can you GAMBLE on 'em, or
can't you? As . a strictly lay
opinion, if you can't gamble on
'em they aren't illegal.
I think perhaps we'd better
add that if you can't gamble on
them nobody will play the things
and the issue will settle itself.
pROM WASHINGTON:
Army Secretary Robert Ste
vens has resigned. President Ei
senhower has nominated the
general counsel of the defense
department, Wilbur Brucker, to
succeed him.
Brucker is a former governor
of Michigan, and has been gen
eral counsel at the Pentagon
since April, 1954.
I SUPPOSE that's hot political
news and will get a big play
in the headlines. The thing that
makes politicians tick and the
political machine run is WHO
GETS WHAT JOB AND WHY.
I'll have to confess I'm not
owner just south of Medford
stopped sanitary progress for a
time by conducting a virtual
one-man campaign against the
improvement. The big reason
his land is now to be taken into
the city is because the very
movement he fought against, be
cause of a few paltry dollars, is
so far behind its one-time sched
ule!) If a hearing was legal and
just in the above instance why
not extend the privilege to the
proposed annex-ees?
I do not live in the area to
be annexed but I am in a water
district and a sewer district,
parts of which the City of Med
ford wants to claim and at the
expense of all of us in the two
districts. ,
G.L. Witte
2914 S. Pacific Hwy.
Contract Extended
For Sewer Project
The city has given W. C. Con
rad, contractor, a six-day exten
sion on the sewage contract
awarded him on May 1, accord
ing to Robert Duff, city manager.
The contract covers Medford's
Eastwood and Capitol Hill sub
divisions. The project is behind
schedule due to difficult excava
tion through a rock formation,
Duff said, and because of the
closeness of homes next to the
proposed sewage line.
Studies toward providing sew
er facilities to the Verde Hills
subdivisions are nearing com
pletion, and a report will be
made to the city council in the
near future, Duff added.
The study is the result of a
petition presented to the city
council recently by residents of
the area.
to
2 31
I MUTTON
I ROAST
I WL
News
much interested in that phase
of politics other than in getting
good men to run our govern
ment If we can get good enough
men to run our government, the
future will be bright enough to
satisfy all of us.
- .
SIGNIFICANT NEWS:
General Motors President
Harlow Curtice announces this
morning that GM is undertaking
a new expansion program call
ing for-capital expenditures of
a HALF BILLION dollars. The
new program, he said, will be
substantially completed by the
end of next year.
He added:
"This program is a measure
of our company's faith in the
country and its future. It will
enable us. to make a full con
tribution to a strong and ex
panding national economy."
yjONEY;YOU know, TALKS.
. It's easy enough to get up be
fore a microphone and allow
that IF OUR CROWD IS RE
TURNED TO OFFICE every
thing will be lovely and the
goose will hang high, but 'tis
something else again to back
one's faith in the future with
plenty of hard-earned cash.
In the long run, those who
back their faith in the future of
our country with cash will be
better for all. of us than those
who back their faith in the fu
ture with words alone.
Two Hew Officials
Appointed at Phoenix
Phoenix A councilman and
treasurer last night were ap
pointed to fill office vacancies
at a special council meeting held
in , the city hall, according to
Dan Adams, mayor.
Henry Jensen was appointed
councilman to succeed Leo Bolls,
and Frances Stevenson was ap
pointed treasurer to finish out
the term of Ron Robbing.
The council seat left vacant
by Al Sorenson will be filled
during the regular meeting next
month, Adams said.
CATFISH DERBY
THANK Y(U
Medford 20-30 Club expresses appreciation to the
following Business Firms and Individuals for their con
tribution in making the 19th Annual National Catfish
Derby such a successful event
Acme Hardware.'.
'Mr. Amacker " ...
Anderson's Thrift Market
Anticipation Shoo
Barker's
Bateman's Restaurant
Morris Boughner
Brill Metal Works
Brinkley and Roberts
Bruce Bauer Lumber Co.
Ernie Brooks
Buster Brown Shoe Store
Mrs. L. C Butterfield
Chapman Jewelers
Copeland Lumber Co.
Crater Lake Motors
Daily Courier
Frank De Sousa
Feldman k Olson Electric
Gardner's Shoe Repair
Ginn's Flowers
Grandview Market
Hadley's
Hall's Sporting Goods
Hillis Refrigeration Co.
Home Appliance Co.
Colleen Hope
Hubbard Bros. Hardware
Hudson's Drug Store
Johnston Jr. Stewart
Franklin Jones
KBES-TV
KBOY
K. F. Herald St News .
KMED
Al Krause Union Oil Dealer
KWIN
KYJC
Lake 0Woeds Resort
Lamport's Sporting Goods
Landis-Shangle .
Lawrence's Jewelers
Leaver Motors
Leonard Electric Co.
Glenn Linn
Mann's
Marshall Wells Store
EAST -SIXTH ; ST,
BEEF
FRESH
SIDE-FSHLI
Five Airmen Die
In Two Crashes;
Inquiries Slated
San Antonio, Tex. (U.R) Air
Force officials today investigated
two separate Randolph Air Force
Base crashes which killed five
airmen and critically injured
two others yesterday. -
A B29 smashed up and burned
on takeoff, killing four and in
juring two others. The Air Fores
identified the dead as:
Capt. James S. Crawford Jr.,
32, New York City.
T-Sgt- Charles M. Hawthorne,
30, instructor-engineer, husband
of Mrs. Jean M. Hawthorne of
Randolph and son of Mr. and
Mrs. John M. Hawthorne, 539 I
Streets, Chula Vista, Calif.
Lt. Col. Willie G. Woods Jr.,
34, Fort Worth.
Second Lt. Bobbie Gene
Wykert, 22, Troy, Kan.
The injured men, both airmen
second class, were identified as
Thomas A. Scholleri of Chicago
and Robert F. Philipskl of De
troit. A second plane, a B57 twin jet
bomber from Randolph, crashed
and burned 16 miles north of
San Antonio. Capt. William P.
Brown, 32, of Springfield, HI.,
the student pilot, was killed.
NOW
IS THE TIME
to start building an insured
savings account with us. You
will find h pleasant and
profitable to Invest here.
FIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS & LOAN ASS'N
of Medford
27 North Holly
An Institution Dedicatee'
To Those Who Save "
McLain's Drug Centre
Medford Auto Uoholstery
Medford Domestic Laundry
Medford Hotel Richfield Serv.
Medford Mail Tribune
Metronomes -
Modern Plbg. St Sheet Metal
. Musician's Union -
Music Mart
Nu-Way Cleaners
Downtown O.K. Rubber Weld
Orchard Home Builders Sup.
Oregonian
Oregon Journal
Purucker's Piano House
Patty Cake Bakery
Perl Funeral Home
J. C. Penney and Co.
Jim Pierce St Orchestra
Porter Lumber Co.
Eve Prentice Accordion
Ted Reaves
Mrs. A. E. Reed
Richfield Truck fc Auto Serv.
Robinson Bros.
Rogue Sporting Goods
Sam's Sporting Goods
F. E. Samson It Co.
Saylor's Barber Shop
Schade's Jewelry Store.
Richard Schuchard
Severson's Candies
Sim's Cycle Sc Hobby Shop ,:
Siskiyou Hardware
Standard Oil Co.
Swem's Gift Shop
Swem's Record Shop
H. B. Shaw
The Times
Toggery
Top Notch Cafe
Toy House
Trowbridge St Flynn
Union Club Barber Shop
Dr. R. J. Urie, Oct. ,
Wainscort'a -
F. W. Woolworth
Walt Young's Stationery
'lb.
VEAL